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[ecrea] CFP Apocalypse and TV
Tue Mar 18 20:22:09 GMT 2008
Call for contributions: Small Screen Revelations:
apocalypse and prophecy in contemporary television
Editor: Marcus ODonnell
Publisher: Sheffield Phoenix Press
Series: Apocalypse and Popular Culture
Series Editor: Dr John Walliss
Publication date: late 2009
Contributions are required for a new collection
of essays that explores the apocalyptic and
prophetic in contemporary television drama and
news reportage. It will form part of the
Sheffield Phoenix Apocalypse and Popular Culture
Series which is being produced in association
with the Hope Centre for Millennialism Studies at Liverpool Hope University.
The volume will explore the intersection of
apocalyptic and prophetic archetypes, story
patterns, motifs and characters in contemporary
televisual storytelling and reportage. Although
the volume is specifically focused on essays
which analyse the manifestations of these
biblical genres in contemporary popular form we
are interested in a wide variety of
interdisciplinary perspectives that draw upon the
resources of cultural studies, screen studies,
journalism and media studies, sociology,
political science, religious studies,
anthropology, theology and biblical studies.
While a number of collections have explored
cinematic representations of the apocalyptic,
comparatively little work has been produced on
the specifically televisual dimensions of
contemporary apocalyptics. This volume aims to
begin to map this area. One of the unique
approaches of this volume is the decision to
survey both television drama as well as news and
current affairs. Raymond Williams famously
described television production and consumption
as flow which incorporates a collage of
televisual experience ranging through drama, news
and advertising. One of the underlying
assumptions of this volume is that there are a
range of important connections that deserve
sustained analysis in the flow between
apocalyptic images of the nightly news and
apocalyptic scenarios of contemporary TV drama.
We are interested in contributions which treat
either of these domains separately but
particularly welcome essays which seek to draw
connections between the dramatic and the
documentary. In either case authors should
address the current cultural and political
context as well as the aesthetic and biblical
dimensions of contemporary television productions.
The volume will focus on post 2000 productions
although space will be given to important 1990s
precursors to the current crop of apocalyptic
television series. Consideration will be given to
essays which focus on earlier works if the
proposal is particularly strong and includes an
analysis which draws out connections/contrasts
with contemporary productions or issues. Essays
which focus on a single series or moment of
reportage as well as essays which follow a
particular theme across a number of different
programs or television genres are both welcome.
The following general areas have been identified
as a possible structure for the volume but at
this stage it is only indicative and should not
be read as precluding other concerns:
1. The monstrous and strange: revelations, visions and supernatural signs
2. The final conflict: good versus evil and apocalyptic violence
3. Remnant communities in apocalyptic times
4. Comings and goings at the end: the raptured and the returned
5. Fate and fatalism in contemporary televisual apocalyptics
6. Prophets and preachers of the end: contemporary jeremiads
Essays dealing with one or more of the following
television series are particularly welcome but
again it is an indicative rather than a prescriptive list:
" 24
" Angel
" Babylon Five
" Battlestar Galactica
" Buffy
" Carnivale
" Jericho
" Lost
" Millennium
" Revelations
" Supernatural
" Star Trek
" The 4400
" The Second Coming
" Twin Peaks
" X Files
Essays dealing with one or more or of the
following aspects of contemporary television news
reportage are also particularly welcome but again the list is indicative only:
" News of wars and rumours of wars: apocalyptic nightly news
" The fate of the earth: science and nature documentaries
" Journalistic jeremiads
" Reporting of Hurricane Katrina and other natural disasters
" Reporting environmental crisis
" Televising terror: live broadcast journalism after September 11
" Routine television news values and the apocalyptic
" Reporting from the developing world: othering the apocalypse
Timeline
Email proposals should be sent to the editor
((marcuso /at/ uow.edu.au)) by 5 May 2008. Proposals
should include a chapter abstract of up to 500
words and a brief biographical note that details
the authors academic affiliations and relevant
publication history. Where possible copies of
previously published articles in the area or
thesis chapters should also be included.
Confirmation of acceptance should be finalised by
early August 2008 and initial drafts of chapters
will be expected by March 2009 with a publication
date of late 2009. Final contributions should
range between 6,000 - 10,000 words with more
space applying to those who take a broad comparative approach.
Preliminary email enquiries and/or early
proposals to the editor are welcome and encouraged.
Marcus ODonnell
School of Journalism and Creative Writing
University of Wollongong
(marcuso /at/ uow.edu.au)
Apocalypse and Popular Culture Series is a
sub-series of the Sheffield Phoenix Bible and
Society series. As such, the focus of each volume
is on the ways in which Biblical apocalyptic
texts, themes and dramatis personae are drawn
upon, transformed and consumed within aspects of
popular culture. Five volumes are currently under
development dealing with film, television,
cyberculture, music and literary/graphic texts.
The series is being produced in association with
the Hope Centre for Millennialism Studies at
Liverpool Hope University under the general
editorship of the centres director Dr John Walliss.
<br>
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Nico Carpentier (Phd)
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Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University of Brussels
Centre for Studies on Media and Culture (CeMeSO)
Pleinlaan 2 - B-1050 Brussels - Belgium
T: ++ 32 (0)2-629.18.56
F: ++ 32 (0)2-629.36.84
Office: 5B.401a
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Katholieke Universiteit Brussel - Catholic University of Brussels
Vrijheidslaan 17 - B-1081 Brussel - Belgium
&
Facultés Universitaires Saint-Louis
Boulevard du Jardin Botanique 43 - B-1000 Brussel - Belgium
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European Communication Research and Education Association
Web: http://www.ecrea.eu
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ECREA's Second European Communication Conference
Barcelona, 25-28 November 2008
http://www.ecrea2008barcelona.org/
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E-mail: (Nico.Carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
Web: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
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